10 August 1804 A.D. Rev. Archibald Gray (CoS)—Sermon on Fasting as French Prep Attack on
Halifax, Nova Scotia
An odd find, to wit, a CoS
sermon on fasting delivered in Halifax, Nova Scotia. Dad sailed out of there
with the Canadians on numerous trips to England. I went in once with the USS
JACK 605 (upon leaving, we picked up a Ruskie sub and chased her over to
Iceland). Lovely Canadian town. Anyways, the French prepped an attack. The CoS
minister delivered (by government order?) a call to fasting and prayer. As an
aside, I've never heard a sermon on fasting nor seen it practiced, yet it is
Biblically directed.
August 10: A Sermon on Fasting (1804)
In
1804, Great Britain and her colonies were under threat of attack by French
forces. As a call went out for a season of prayer and fasting, the Rev.
Archibald Gray delivered the following sermon on this day, August 10th, in
1804. To read the full sermon, click here. The last paragraph reproduced here
below on the nature of a solemn fast, is shown in bold print and provides a
particularly good and useful definition.
“Shall
we despond in the present state of our country? Shall we rashly distrust the
care of an overruling Providence, which has upheld her in many a perilous
contest? . . . ‘It is good to
hope, and quietly wait, for the salvation of the Lord.’ In His
mercy the means of our safety will be found.”
A
Sermon, preached on 10th August, 1809 [sic], the day appointed, by Government,
for a General Fast, by Archibald Gray, minister of the Church of Scotland, and
pastor of the Protestant Dissenting Congregation, Halifax, Nova-Scotia.
Halifax: Printed by John Howe, 1804.
A
SERMON.
Psalm
CXLVII—12.
“Praise
thy God, O Zion, for He hath strengthened the bars of thy gates.”
Among
the nations of the East, a disposition has always prevailed to express the
sentiments of piety and devotion by some correspondent external act. Thus a
sacrifice was offered by the sinner, not as an atonement for his offences, but,
as an acknowledgment of his unworthiness and guilt; a tacit confession that he
deserved, himself, to suffer that death, which was inflicted on the victim thus
substituted in his room. From the altar, reared by the hand of the grateful
worshipper, the smoke of incense ascended to heaven, along with the praise of
his Creator, for some recent, and signal, instance of divine goodness. And, on
occasion of great calamities, or where such appeared to threaten them, nations,
as well as individuals, have set apart, in token of their humiliation before
God, certain seasons for solemn fasting.
It
may not be improper, considering the purpose for which we are assembled, this
day, to premise a few words on the nature of a fast. The greatest, and warmest,
disputes have ever arisen from the merest trifles. Mankind have often been
divided about external ceremonies; yet external ceremonies are of very little
consequence. Whether a man should sit, or stand, or bend the knee, in the
presence of his Maker, when he addresses Him in the language of praise and
adoration; whether or not he should appoint, for periodical and solemn
approaches to the throne of grace, some particular day, the twelfth or
fourteenth of the moon; whether he should repeat certain prayers, in white
garments or black, with his head covered or bare, appear, at first view and
while the passions are yet uninflamed by the heat of controversy and the strife
of words, matters of the greatest indifference. That the heart should be
sincere, and the affections truly devout, see, to a man of plain sense, the
only circumstances which, in such cases, demand our serious attention, as what
the Almighty will, undoubtedly, require.
In
like manner, in fasting, the external observance can be of little consequence,
if considered separately from the affections of the mind. An abstinence from
our usual indulgences may be a proper expression of humiliation, but it can be
nothing more. In itself it has no claim to merit; it can prove of no avail; it
can only be acceptable to heaven as it is connected with the sentiments of
sorrow for sin, and sincere resolutions of penitence. “To break the bands of
wickedness, not to bow down the head like a bullrush,” saith the Spirit of God,
by the voice of the prophet, “is the fast that the LORD hath chosen.”
We
are called upon as individuals, and as members of society who hold the welfare
of their country dear, to confess, with deep and unfeigned contrition, our
private and our national sins, which might, long before now, have justly drawn
upon us the judgments of heaven. We should be sensible, indeed we cannot but be
sensible, that in many respects we have frequently and heinously offended.
While we form, therefore, the virtuous resolutions of penitence and amendment
for the time to come, let us humbly implore, through the merits of our powerful
Mediator, the pardon and remission of the past. Let us pray that the Father of
mercies would deal with us rather “according to the multitude of His tender
mercies,” than after our own demerits; that He would “still pity us as a father
pities his children,” but forbear to “chasten us in His wrath,” or “visit us in
His hot displeasure.” What created being, alas! is able to stand before
Omnipotence incensed? When the measure of the sinner’s iniquities is full, and
he endeavours not, by penitence and reformation, to cancel his transgressions,
or to appease the Judge of the world, if that God whom he appears to brave, but
raise His voice in indignation, for a moment, certain destruction overtakes him—sudden
and fearful as falls the thunderbolt from heaven. Not on us, O Lord, not on us,
sinners, we confess, but repentant sinners, let the weight of Thine indignation
fall. We confess, with sorrow, our sins and humbly deprecate thy wrath. O Thou
First and Last, Thou greatest and best of beings, what are we? Blind, feeble,
and erring mortals, creatures of yesterday, who tomorrow shall mingle with the
dust from which we sprung; what are we that Thou shouldest chasten us in Thine
anger? Is not man but as an atom in Thy universe; and the son of man but as a
worm before Thee? Or if our own insignificance be insufficient to shield us
from Thy wrath, hear, we beseech Thee, the voice of intercession from Him whom
Thou hearest always; and look on the blood that flowed from the cross to wash
away the sins of men and of nations.
Abstinence
from food is nothing; nor are any outward marks of humiliation of the least
importance, but so far as they are undissembled and faithful tokens of the
affections which prevail within. We have, this day, assembled to make
confession of our sins, and to implore, for ourselves and for our country, the
pardon of heaven, and the continuance of that protection and favour, by which,
above every other land, ours has been long and eminently distinguished. To the
prayer of unfeigned piety the God, whom we serve, refuseth not to listen. But
let us beware of deceiving ourselves; of “approaching Him with our lips, while
our hearts are far from Him.” No secrets can be hid from His all-searching eye.
And though He rejecteth not the sighing of a contrite heart, neither desireth
the death of a sinner, though He is ready to aid, by His good Spirit, the
struggles of returning virtue, and to receive, like a tender father, with favour
and indulgence, His repentant, though prodigal son. He cannot view, without
indignation, the presumptuous boldness of those weak mortals who substitute a
show of devotion in the room of sincere virtue, of good and holy resolutions,
who bow down before Him as it were in mockery, and approach Him “with a lie in
their right hand.”
The
folly of such an attempt can be surpassed only by its danger. Sensible of guilt
and of frailty, we should seek, in all humbleness of mind, some means of
expiating our past offences, some prop to sustain our weakness, in time to
come, against the temptations which surround and will infallibly assail us. For
the faithful disciple of the Saviour, this atonement and support are abundantly
provided. Let us come unto God, through Him, and every stain shall be wiped
away, with which sin hath polluted our souls. TO all who earnestly solicit it,
divine assistance shall be given. To the weak, who are conscious of their
weakness yet desirous of persevering in virtue, wisdom and strength shall be
imparted from on high. By hypocrisy all our former offences shall be dyed in
indelible crimson. Instead of securing an interest in the merits of our Lord,
or winning the Spirit of truth to take up His abode in our hearts, by a
semblance of piety, while we are strangers to its power and benign influence on
our temper and conduct, we shall quench the Spirit of God, crucify our Redeemer
afresh, and put Him to open shame. Encumbered with a load of guilt voluntarily
incurred, we may “strive to enter,” according to the expression of our Lord,
“the strait gate of life, but shall find to our confusion, that we are finally
and for ever excluded.
The nature of a solemn fast, then, appears to be the
humbling of ourselves in the presence of our Creator, attended with the
confession of our sins, an earnest solicitation of pardon, and a faithful and
steady determination to amend our lives. As an individual learns, in the hard
school of affliction, to reflect on those blemishes in his character, which the
dazzling sunshine of prosperity had wholly prevented him from discerning; so
societies and nations, who, blessed with a long train of fortunate events, are
almost ready to forget God, when calamity overtakes or appears to menace them,
call to mind with profound regret, their national iniquities; and the nation,
like the individual, conscious of guilt and humbled by chastisement, sinks in
the dust before her Judge and seeks by humble supplication to avert or to
mitigate the sentence of avenging justice.
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